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Home/ Questions/Q 528167
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T08:57:32+00:00 2026-05-13T08:57:32+00:00

I have a social network site I have been working on for a couple

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I have a social network site I have been working on for a couple years in PHP/MySQL, I am now re-buidling the whole site from scratch again though. This time around I would really like to add in the ability for users to set a timezone for times on my site.

So with that said, I am asking on a guide from start to finish of the steps I need to include to do this please. My old site used mysql datetime for all dates and times and it worked great but I read that it is best to use like a text filed and store all dates and times with UTC, can someone explain how I could do this? Would I still be able to use the now() function in php to save a time to the mysql?

Also I have seen the list that php can generate of all the timezones, the one where it shows like a million (not really) but I am wondering, would it be possible to show some sort of map with images or something and link to the main timezones?

Please any tips for setting a users timezone, I can do that part, but once I have a user’s timezone saved and ready to use, how can I make sure the users see’s the correct time and how do I save times in the correct time.

Sorry if this was confusing, any help would be great though, thanks.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T08:57:32+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 8:57 am

    When working with php, from my experience, it is the best to store timestamps, generated with time(), as an int in the database. While it may not be that easy to read them when looking at the database (as you cannot guess the actual date just from the number), but the timestamp is the most-native thing when working with dates in php.

    To save each user’s timezone, you can simply save the offset, in either hours, or better (as some timezones are half an hour off) in minutes. So for example my timezone offset would be +60 (UTC+1), while in America most will have something like -480 (UTC-8) or similar.

    Then when displaying the times for a user, you just pick the timestamp (which is in UTC time) and the timezone offset and generate a readable date from it using the standard date() function for formatting.

    For example:

    <?php
    $time   = time(); // from database or time() for "now"
    $offset = -480;   // from database
    
    // add the offset to the time you want to display and you have the user's time
    echo date( 'd.m.Y H:i', $time + $offset * 60 );
    ?>
    

    In addition you could then also store the formatting string (d.m.Y H:i) in the database, so that every user can pick his favorite format.

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